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This is an enhanced edition of HBR article R0504E, originally published in April 2005. HBR OnPoint articles include the full-text HBR article plus a summary of key ideas and company examples to help you quickly absorb and apply the concepts.

Corporate treasurers and chief financial officers have become adept at quantifying and managing a wide variety of risks: financial, hazard, and operational. To defend themselves, they use tried-and-true tools such as hedging, insurance, and backup systems. Some companies have even adopted the concept of enterprise risk management, integrating available risk management techniques in a comprehensive, organization wide approach. But most managers have not addressed in a systematic way the greatest threat of all: strategic risks, the array--of external events and trends that can devastate a company's growth trajectory and shareholder value. For example, a new technology may overtake your product. Gradual shifts in the market may slowly erode one of your brands beyond the point of viability. The key to surviving these strategic risks, the authors say, is knowing how to assess and respond to them. In this article, they lay out a method for identifying and responding to strategic threats. They categorize the risks into seven major classes and describe a particularly dangerous example within each category. The authors also offer countermeasures to take against these risks and describe how individual companies have deployed them to neutralize a threat and, in many cases, capitalize on it. Besides limiting the downside of risk, strategic-risk management forces executives to think more systematically about the future, thus helping them identify opportunities for growth.

learning objective:

To be able to categorize a variety of distinct types of strategic risk and understand which unique countermeasures deal with each type of strategic risk.

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Corporate treasurers and chief financial officers have become adept at quantifying and managing a wide variety of risks: financial, hazard, and operational. To defend themselves, they use tried-and-true tools such as hedging, insurance, and backup systems. Some companies have even adopted the concept of enterprise risk management, integrating available risk management techniques in a comprehensive, organizationwide approach. But most managers have not addressed in a systematic way the greatest threat of all: strategic risks--the array of external events and trends that can devastate a company's growth trajectory and shareholder value. For example, a new technology may overtake your product. Gradual shifts in the market may slowly erode one of your brands beyond the point of viability. The key to surviving these strategic risks, the authors say, is knowing how to assess and respond to them. In this article, they lay out a method for identifying and responding to strategic threats. They categorize the risks into seven major classes and describe a particularly dangerous example within each category. The authors also offer countermeasures to take against these risks and describe how individual companies have deployed them to neutralize a threat and, in many cases, capitalize on it. Besides limiting the downside of risk, strategic risk management forces executives to think more systematically about the future, thus helping them identify opportunities for growth.

learning objective:

To be able to categorize a variety of distinct types of strategic risk and understand which unique countermeasures deal with each type of strategic risk.

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This article includes a one-page preview that quickly summarizes the key ideas and provides an overview of how the concepts work in practice along with suggestions for further reading.

At a time when companies are poised to seize the growth opportunities of a rebounding economy, many of them, whether they know it or not, face a growth crisis. Even during the boom years of the past decade, only a small fraction of companies enjoyed consistent double-digit revenue growth. And those that did often achieved it through short-term measures--such as mergers and inflated price increases--that don't provide the foundation for growth over the long term. But there is a way out of this predicament. The authors claim that companies can achieve sustained growth by leveraging their "hidden assets," a wide array of underused, intangible capabilities and advantages that most established companies already hold. To date, much of the research on intangible assets has centered on intellectual property and brand recognition. But in this article, the authors uncover a host of other assets that can help spark growth. They identify four major categories of hidden assets: customer relationships, strategic real estate, networks, and information. And they illustrate each with an example of a company that has creatively used its hidden assets to produce new sources of revenue. Executives have spent years learning to create growth using products, facilities, and working capital. But they should really focus on mobilizing their hidden assets to serve their customers' higher order needs--in other words, create offerings that make customers' lives easier, better, or less expensive. Making that shift in mindset isn't easy, admit the authors, but companies that do it may not only create meaningful new value for their customers but also produce double-digit revenue and earnings growth for investors.

learning objective:

To learn how companies can spur new growth by using the intangible capabilities and advantages they accumulated while building their core business.

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Business Fundamentals are collections of Harvard Business School background materials, reflecting HBS courses and supplemented by self-study aids. This collection includes seven background notes, one Harvard Business School case study, and one article each from Harvard Business Review and California Management Review. The collection covers ideas, issues, and best-practice principles associated directly with sales management or with closely related topics, such as designing and managing distribution channels. Included are: "Managing Selling and the Salesperson," "Managing Major Accounts," "Strategic Sales Management: A Boardroom Issue," "Using ABC to Manage Customer Mix and Relationships," "Sprint Sell to Close Sales Quickly," "Staple Yourself to an Order," "Channel Management," "Designing Channels of Distribution," "Can Selling Be Globalized?: The Pitfalls of Global Account Management," and the case study "Centra Software." Each item is preceded by a summary, an outline, learning objectives, and a set of questions, ideas, and exercises.

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This is an enhanced edition of HBR article R00112, originally published in January/February 2000. HBR OnPoint articles save you time by enhancing an original Harvard Business Review article with an overview and an annotated bibliography. This enables you to scan, absorb, and share the management insights.

In this article, four close observers of e-commerce speculate about the future. Adrian Slywotzky believes the Internet will overturn the inefficient push model of supplier-customer interaction. He predicts that in all sorts of markets, customers will use choiceboards--interactive, on-line systems that let people design their own products by choosing from a menu of attributes, prices, and delivery options. And he explores how the shifting role of the customer--from passive recipient to active designer--will change the way companies compete. Clayton Christensen and Richard Tedlow agree that e-commerce, on a broad level, will change the basis of competitive advantage in retailing. The essential mission of retailers--getting the right product in the right place at the right price at the right time--is a constant. But over the years retailers have fulfilled that mission differently thanks to a series of disruptive technologies. The authors identify patterns in the way that previous retailing transformations have unfolded to shed light on how retailing may evolve in the Internet era. Nicholas Carr takes issue with the widespread notion that the Internet will usher in an era of "disintermediation," in which producers of goods and services bypass wholesalers and retailers to connect directly with their customers. Business is undergoing precisely the opposite phenomenon--what he calls hypermediation. Transactions over the Web routinely involve all sorts of intermediaries. It is these middlemen that are positioned to capture most of the profits.

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As we enter the twenty-first century, the business world is consumed by questions about e-commerce. In this article, four close observers of e-commerce speculate about the future of commerce. Adrian Slywotzky believes the Internet will overturn the inefficient push model of supplier-customer interaction. He predicts that in all sorts of markets, customers will use choiceboards--interactive, on-line systems that let people design their own products by choosing from a menu of attributes, prices, and delivery options. And he explores how the shifting role of the customer--from passive recipient to active designer--will change the way companies compete. Clayton Christensen and Richard Tedlow agree that e-commerce, on a broad level, will change the basis of competitive advantage in retailing. The essential mission of retailers--getting the right product in the right place at the right price at the right time--is a constant. But over the years retailers have fulfilled that mission differently thanks to a series of disruptive technologies. The authors identify patterns in the way that previous retailing transformations have unfolded to shed light on how retailing may evolve in the Internet era. Nicholas Carr takes issue with the widespread notion that the Internet will usher in an era of "disintermediation," in which producers of goods and services bypass wholesalers and retailers to connect directly with their customers. Business is undergoing precisely the opposite phenomenon--what he calls hypermediation. Transactions over the Web routinely involve all sorts of intermediaries. It is these middlemen that are positioned to capture most of the profits.

learning objective:

To compare and contrast four experts' views on e-commerce's potential, including customers' ability to design products and merchants' ability to customize marketing communications.

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Today's strategy might be yesterday's news. To keep up with the fast pace of change, companies need to reinvent themselves regularly, creating new business designs as quickly as possible. Most strategies fit into patterns that have been around for decades--it is up to the managers to learn these patterns and adapt to them with a speed that will leave competitors far behind.

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Explains why sales management has become an increasingly important and complex topic for top managers. Demonstrates the financial impact of a superior salesforce and then describes a way to gain superiority. The focus is on a salesforce that is responsive to customer needs and competing imperatives. Organization and management receive careful attention.

learning objective:

Designed to help executives and MBAs understand the importance of a strategic sales management perspective and how to achieve superior salesforce performance.

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Describes the Darwinian internal and external processes that lead to poor performance from a previously well performing company. Demonstrates why any business design eventually fails and the role of organizational calcification and poor leadership in the failure. Also provides prescriptions to prevent and alleviate the problems.

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When it comes to marketing, concentrating on the four Ps - product development, price determination, place of distribution, and promotion - no longer ensures competitiveness. Relying on short-term thinking, many companies base their marketing budgets on annual sales forecasts and then demand immediate results based on dollars spent. These companies are confusing cause and effect. They don't realize that developing a "quality" customer base - loyal customers who yield high profits - can take many years. And quality is what matters for long-term success. Companies would do better treating marketing expenditures the same way they treat capital outlays: as investments that drive revenue over time. Many industry giants - Ivory Soap, Heinz Tomato Ketchup, and Ritz Crackers, to name a few - got that way through cumulative investment of years and even decades. Newcomers can leverage to beat the odds, however, and, with a shrewd strategy, turbocharge their returns.

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